In fierce opposition to the ADA’s National Nutrition Month, I’m doing my own advocacy with National REAL Nutrition Month. Throughout March, I’ll post ideas and tips for something you can do to improve your own health habits, along with stuff you can do to painlessly share what you know with the people you love. (All the posts thus far are right here, or click the “National REAL Nutrition Month” label below.)

NRNM: Go Cuckoo for Coconut (Oil)

The first time I experimented with coconut oil, I didn’t know anything about it, so I got a big bargain tub in the baking aisle of my local run o’ the mill grocery store. I was very skeptical and intimidated. It sat in the cabinet for months until I finally opened it, felt overwhelmed by what I saw inside, and tossed it in the trash.

I know! That’s totally lame.

Everyone I respect at the gym and online kept talking about how much they loved coconut oil, so I decided to try it again. But I did some research before my next attempt. Here’s what I learned:

1. Organic is best because that means that no chemicals are used during growing or processing.

2. Unrefined is a must. It’s less processed than refined, and it’s approved for cooking at higher temperatures.

3. Because coconut oil is a saturated fat – it’s 92% saturated – it’s solid at room temperature. If you’re accustomed to liquid oils for cooking, this can be weird at first.

4. Coconut oil is great for cooking at higher temperatures. Our dear friend extra-vigin olive oil (EVOO) oxidizes at 200-250F degrees… which means it turns into something that’s not so good for you. Unrefined coconut oil is A-OK even at 350F degrees.

5. It tastes mildly like coconut but had less coconut flavor than I thought it would. To my olive-oil-saturated tastebuds, my first spoonful tasted like butter, and I was delighted. DELIGHTED!

6. Coconut is like that seemingly perfect over-acheiver we know who we’re grateful to have in our life because they’re awesome, but is also annoying because they seem to be good at everything. Or maybe that’s just me. Anyway, coconut oil has been shown to help with thryoid wonkiness, has antiviral/antibacterial properties, helps protect against liver and kidney damage, helps manage blood sugar and insulin, and dang! it tastes freakin’ awesome, too.

So now, we go through about a jar or so of this kind of coconut oil every week:

Tip For YouStart using coconut oil as your primary fat for cooking. Just about every meal I eat begins with 1/2 to 1 tablespoon melted in a saute pan. You can also drop a dollop on top of hot steamed vegetables like broccoli and brussels sprouts – tastes like buttered broccoli!

But don’t retire your EVOO! You need it for your giant salads… and it’s lovely drizzled on top of already cooked food. I’ve yet to find a piece of grilled meat or pile of vegetables or homemade soup that wasn’t made even more delicious by drizzling a teaspoon or so of EVOO over the top.

Extra Special Bonus Tip: Make Fat BombsDave doesn’t like scooping the coconut oil out of the jar, so we found a kickass work-around. Heat the glass jar in the microwave – without the lid! – until the oil melts to liquid. It takes about 20-30 seconds, depending on how cool your house is (temperature-wise, not decor style). Then measure the oil into a plastic ice cube tray; I make ours with 1 tablespoon servings. Place the tray into the fridge until the oil solidifies, then pop out into a ziplock bag. Fat bombs!

(Humongous thanks to the darling person with a giant brain on the Whole30 blog who first posted this idea. I’ve forgotten who suggested it, so if it was you, please post to comments below so we can honor you!)

Tip For Your Near & DearCoconut oil got a very bad rap in 1994 when the Center for Science in the Public Interest blamed movie popcorn’s terrible nutrition profile on the fact that it’s popped in coconut oil. And most people have been told over and over and over that saturated fat will kill them.

That means that the new message that a saturated fat like coconut oil is actually very healthful can be difficult for most people to swallow.

Proceed gently.

Perhaps cook a saute for your dear ones in coconut oil, and have this article from The New York Times handy for dinnertime conversation. Note that the Times article doesn’t yet wholeheartedly embrace coconut oil as a primary fat source, but it does start to remove the previous stigma.

And here’s a juicy quote that exorcises the demon of saturated fat:

“I think we in the nutrition field are beginning to say that saturated fats are not so bad, and the evidence that said they were is not so strong,” said Dr. Thomas Brenna, a professor of nutritional sciences at Cornell University.

Since going paleo/primal in November I've been having a full on love affair with coconut. I buy the same kind you do, and ever since my first go-round using it…I haven't looked back. I was skeptical to cook eggs with it at first..thinking the coconut taste would make the eggs taste wierd (I only recently did this for my Whole30)….um…wrong. Coconut oil once again proved to me that it is the best.thing.ever.

coco chanel on destiny

"I don't understand how a woman can leave the house without fixing herself up a little – if only out of politeness. And then, you never know, maybe that's the day she has a date with destiny. And it's best to be as pretty as possible for destiny." – Coco Chanel

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